An encyclopedic collection of

Sea Shanties & Maritime Music

"To those who know and can feel, there is a smack of salt spray in every line of these rude virile verses. To them once again will come back the creak of the blocks as the falls whine through them, and the dead heavy lurch as the boat jerks upwards... I can hardly think of any words or tunes that appeal more intimately to all the spirit of adventure that life has left in me."

— Arthur Conan Doyle, Letter to F. T. Bullen, 1914

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Jun
21

A. L. Lloyd identifies The Eclipse as a “Stonehaven steamer” that left for the Arctic during the 1887 whaling season. Gavin Sutherland, in writing for the Centre for Scottish Studies at the University of Aberdeen, provides more information:

Launched from Hall’s yard, Aberdeen, on 3rd January 1867 the ‘Eclipse’ cost almost £12,000, carried eight whale boats and a crew of 55 men. After a famous career at Peterhead the ship was sold to Dundee in 1893 and later on to Norway. Renamed ‘Lomonosov’, the old ship ended her ocean going days as a research vessel under the Russian flag based in Murmansk.

The ship is memorialized in The Eclipse, which opens with a line about the twenty-first of June, when the crew spotted a whale and “lowered all hands away.”

The Eclipse’s famous captain David Gray enlisted the help of Australian photographer Walter Livingstone-Learmonth during the 1888 season. The Eclipse can be seen flenching a whale (stripping the blubber) in the photograph here.

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